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About Us |
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Patient Education |
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Photo Gallery |
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The ASPS
Patient Photo Gallery currently includes
before and
after surgery pictures. |
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Face |
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NORMAL |
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Smooth skin without
wrinkles or folds, ideally. A crease between the nose
and the corners of the mouth is normal. A crease
underneath the bottom of the eye is normal.
- No jowls or hanging skin.
- A well-defined jaw line.
- No turkey-gobbler.
COMMENT:
Wrinkles and folds are signs of age. The dependent areas
like the jaw line and the areas of greatest motion like the
line between the nose and mouth show the first signs.
We have separated this problem of heavy skin treated by
a facelift from the finer wrinkles that will be addressed in
the next section under skin. |
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SELF-EVALUATION: |
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- Pull up on the side of your cheeks.
NOTE: Patients
should understand that the center of pull from surgery is
different from the center of pull when you do it by
yourself. When you place your finger next to any
wrinkle and pull, of course it will go away.
Unfortunately with surgery, the location of the pull is not
the same. The area of tension is greatest where the
surgeon makes his cuts and places his sutures.
SO: I tell patients to pull as hard as
you can. Then, relax 50%. That's what you can
expect.
- Grasp the excess skin in your neck and
imagine that gone. Only grasp what is held easily.
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HOW MUCH
CAN BE IMPROVED?
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- Everyone is different with a
facelift. The older the patient, the more dramatic is
the result. It is easier to keep a young patient
looking young than make an old patient look younger.
- Revision results are often less exciting.
- The improvement usually lasts years, at
least ten or twenty. If most people have a lift at
forty or fifty, they may have a second one at sixty or
seventy. Some people can't stand the smallest wrinkle
and come back sooner.
- Again, things never end up as tight as you
can make them and after six months and a year they relax
quite a bit. That's why they may look too taunt at the
beginning.
- A fold between the nose and mouth is
normal. Don't be surprise if it recurs.
- With an incision under the chin, excess
skin and fat can be tucked very well.
- Liposuction may serve well enough in young
patients with just some excess fat.
- Scars are usually easy to hide.
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Various
surgeries |
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Mini Facelift
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Facial Surgery
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Facelift
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Facial Augmentation
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Botox
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OPTIONS:
FACELIFTS
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As the skin of the face sags
from gravity, many people consider the possibility of having a
facelift. Tremendous improvement can be achieved by
returning a youthful appearance through a well-done
procedure.
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DEEP FOLDS VERSUS
SUPERFICIAL WRINKLES |
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There are two aspects to
wrinkling of the face. One are the heavy deep folds that
tend to create a down hanging appearance, particularly in the
jowl region along the jaw line and the neck. These are
the result of gravity dragging the face downward.
Second are the more superficial
wrinkles in the surface of the skin and these are often
addressed separately. They are the consequence of
sun-damage and aging. The deep folds and heavy
skin can be corrected with the face lift. Fine wrinkles
and skin irregularities may need separate treatment by
peeling, dermabrasion, or some other means.
We will discuss skin treatments
in the next section. Some skin procedures that tighten
the skin may support the deep tissue for a while. In
some patients, the problems with the jowls and hanging chin
can be treated well with liposuction or some other simple fat
removal procedure. It is usually a question of whether
the problem is primarily hanging skin and loose muscle or
whether it is also excess fat. Each person is
different. |
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HOW MUCH YOUNGER CAN I LOOK WITH
A FACE LIFT?
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The older you are the younger
you'll look, so that if we do a facelift on someone who is
seventy years old who has never had a face lift, the change is
much more dramatic than if someone is fifty, if for no other
reason than their face has been sagging for that much
longer.
I try not to number the years
that a person may improve after a facelift. Patients may
bring a picture from a certain age and ask if they can look
like that again. I try to convince them not to think of
it that way. You will look different after a facelift
and younger, of course. Because of the re-draping of the
skin, you will never look like you did before at one
particular age. |
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HOW OLD SHOULD I BE WHEN I GET A
FACE LIFT?
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The answer to this is
different for everyone and depends on the amount of loose skin
that is hanging and also on how much it bothers you.
Some people want to reverse the earliest signs of aging and
some people are less concerned. There is an axiom that
"It is easier to keep a young person looking young than it is
to make an old person look young".
Generally speaking, if a person
has a facelift at age forty or forty-five, they might request
a second somewhere around sixty or sixty-five and usually that
is about it. Just like other procedures in plastic
surgery, when you ask how long will this procedure last, it is
relative. The first signs of the tissues relaxing may
occur in only a few years. Before you would return to
your original condition, easily ten or twenty years could go
by. You would never truly return to that original
appearance in any case. |
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WHERE TO LIFT?
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There have been almost a
limitless array or variations on the standard facelifts
described and a complete discussion is truly beyond the scope
of this manual and probably not important to you as a
patient.
If the problems are
primarily in the face alone or in the neck alone, you may
suffice with either the upper portion of the facelift or a
NECK LIFT alone. In this case, you can approach the
surgeon with a lesser charge for a lesser procedure. For
instance, if you are simply addressing the neck, and if that
surgeon won't accommodate you, there are many surgeons who
would perform simply a neck lift and so on.
Likewise, the neck lift is
made from an incision that goes around the posterior portion
of the ear and the posterior hair line. The center of
pull is in the upper neck and combined with the chin tuck can
produce essentially the full results of the facelift in the
neck area.
The full facelift has an
incision that extends from up in the hairline, curves around
the edge of the ear, and back behind the ear, and the central
pull is in the jowl line.
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WHERE TO MAKE THE INCISIONS?
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The most common variation that
people are acquainted with is IN-THE-EAR versus
IN-FRONT-OF-THE-EAR. This is a very small difference in the
facelift incision that only involves approximately less than
an inch of the incision that curves around the small portion
of the ear.
If a patient has a nice natural
crease at the edge of the ear, many surgeons put the incision
there, in-front-of-the-ear. If they specifically request
it, I will put it in-the-ear. When it is put in front of
the ear, there can be some blunting of the ear cartilage that
likewise looks unattractive.
Frankly, the incision
in-front-of-the-ear is rarely a problem for most patients, and
they can wear their hair up once this is healed.
Another variation has to
do with the incision at the hair line. We put the
incision high in the hair if the patient is only planning on
one or two facelifts and has a low hairline. If someone
anticipates four or five facelifts, then it would be important
to put the incision at the edge of the hairline, so that
hair-bearing skin is not lost.
If the incision is properly
designed, the patient can still wear their hair up. Likewise
with the incision behind the ear, we generally put this at the
hairline to keep it closer to the center of pull and avoid
removing hair-bearing skin. Patients who wear their hair
short or up should still be able to do so.
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IS IT NECESSARY TO LIFT THE DEEP
TISSUE?
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From a surgeon's point of view
there are a few technical touches that different surgeons add
and may or may not consider important.
Besides the removal of excess
skin, many surgeons do something to pull the deep muscles and
connective tissue tighter. I personally believe that a
thorough job in this area is worth the effort to a
patient. While all surgeons will say that they do
something in this area, some simply put in a few stitches, and
others truly trim and remove the excess tissue and perform
almost a second facelift to the deep tissue.
There is more risk to the nerves
of the face when this is done.
The other new facelift variation
is the extra deep facelift, known as the subperiosteal
facelift, in which the tissue is raised from the bone
up. This is very controversial and the jury is still
out. There is some concern that the supporting elements
that are cut during surgery may permit more drooping rather
than less.
Some of the latest approaches
are difficult to evaluate since rarely is one side of the
facelift done in one way and the other done a second way to
allow a real visual comparison. As a patient, you are often
left with nothing more than the surgeon's very biased
opinion.
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LASER FACELIFT
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Recently there is the laser
facelift in which the identical operation as a standard
facelift is performed, only using the laser. This
procedure takes longer, and although there may be less
bruising in the immediate week or two after surgery, the
amount of excess skin removed and the tightening of the
tissues is exactly the same. In fact, with the laser, it
may be difficult to access some areas at odd angles. The
procedure also takes longer for the surgeon.
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CHIN TUCK?
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Some surgeons, depending
on the size of the turkey gobble underneath the skin, may
elect to do a chin tuck procedure in addition to the
facelift. The incision in this area usually heals well
and it should not worry you if the surgeon suggests
this.
The ability to tighten the
tissues is best when you can pull them as close to the area of
loose skin as possible. From way up by the ears and
hairline, it may be difficult to get good long-term pull way
down in the front by the chin. The extra incision by the
chin allows helpful access.
Instead of a facelift, the chin
tuck may be a nice alternative for many patients who want a
faster recovery and a simpler procedure. This serves the
area under the chin very well, but does not address the sides
of the face and jowl line when upward pull is required.
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FACELIFT AFTERCARE
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This only includes items
that are different from the NOSE AFTERCARE. READ THAT
before going on to this material. Most items are the
same.
- Remove the entire dressing the next morning
or the doctor will do it for you.
- Cold packs may be applied to the face for
48 hours. After that, they won't have much
effect.
- Expect some tightness and pressure,
especially when chewing.
- Sutures remain in about five days, clips
about two weeks.
- Do not sunbathe after surgery, especially
for the first few months.
- Keep the incision lines clean. Use
hydrogen peroxide to clean off adherent blood. Use
ointment to keep the incision line moist.
- You may wash your hair gently the day after
surgery. Soap it lightly and use a brief spray of
water. Don't run the water through your hair.
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NOTIFY YOUR DOCTOR
of any
areas of special PAIN OR SWELLING. If
there is fluid draining from an area of a wound
INFORM YOUR DOCTOR.If one area is
especially RED and TENDER,
let the doctor know.
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DON'T PANIC. Most
problems are easily treated and managed.
- If you were given antibiotics or other
medicines, take them as prescribed.
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FACELIFT
COMPLICATIONS
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- ASYMMETRY: Small differences are
common. The face will tend to even out as you move it
once again.
- NUMBNESS: Usually from damage to a skin
nerve just below the ear. Usually it resolves but may
take a long time.
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MUSCLE PARALYSIS: The nerves that move
muscles are different from those that control
sensation.
There are two branches of
the nerve to the face that are at risk of being
damaged. One is the nerve to the forehead. If
this occurs and produces a noticeable problem, the treatment
is to cut the same nerve on the other side of the face. The
forehead will lay flat.
The second nerve is the one that goes to the
corner of the mouth. It travels along the jaw
line. If it is damaged, the corner of the mouth may
tend to drag downward as the person talks. Again,
function may return to this nerve with time, so it is
advisable to wait six months to a year for some sign of
recovery. Some secondary procedures may help restore
the defect, but it may never return to perfect.
- PERSISTENT FOLDS AND WRINKLES
- HEMATOMA
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LOSS OF HAIR/ALTERED HAIRLINE:
Discuss
these with your surgeon. Make sure everything will end
up where you expect it to be. Women are often sorry to
lose the tuft of hair just above their ear, so ask your
surgeon about that.
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SCARRING:
Usually the patients consider
the scarring a response to the surgeon's technique but more
often the healing characteristics of their skin are
responsible. After the tissues have softened again and
stretched, a revision of the scar might be worthwhile.
Usually, we would wait about a years.
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New Page 1
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About Surgery |
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Areas of
surgery |
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Planning your surgery |
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